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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Brutus v Cozens [1972] UKHL 6 (19 July 1972) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1972/6.html Cite as: [1972] UKHL 6, [1973] AC 854 |
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Parliamentary
Archives,
HL/PO/JU/4/3/1219
HOUSE OF LORDS
BRUTUS
v.
COZENS
Lord
Reid
Lord
Morris of Borth-y-Gest
Viscount
Dilhorne
Lord Diplock
Lord
Kilbrandon
Lord Reid
my lords,
" Whether conduct which
evidences a disrespect for the rights of
" others so that it
is likely to cause their resentment or give rise to
"
protests from them is insulting behaviour within the meaning of
"
section 5 of the Public Order Act, 1936."
" Any person who in any
public place or at any public meeting uses
" threatening,
abusive or insulting words or behaviour with intent to
"
provoke a breach of the peace or whereby a breach of the peace is
"
likely to be occasioned shall be guilty of an offence."
Subsequent amendments do not affect the question which we have to consider.
2
have been proved. If it is alleged that the tribunal has
reached a wrong
decision then there can be a question of law but
only of a limited character.
The question would normally be
whether their decision was unreasonable in
the sense that no
tribunal acquainted with the ordinary use of language
could
reasonably reach that decision.
Were it otherwise we should reach an impossible
position. When consider-
ing the meaning of a word one often goes
to a dictionary. There one finds
other words set out. And if one
wants to pursue the matter and find the
meaning of those other
words the dictionary will give the meaning of those
other words in
still farther words which often include the word for whose
meaning
one is searching.
No doubt the Court could act as a dictionary. It could
direct the tribunal
to take some word or phrase other than the
word in the statute and consider
whether that word or phrase
applied to or covered the facts proved. But
we have been warned
time and again not to substitute other words for the
words of a
statute. And there is very good reason for that. Few words
have
exact synonyms. The overtones are almost always different.
Or the Court could frame a definition. But then again
the tribunal would
be left with words to consider. No doubt a
statute may contain a definition
—which incidentally often
creates more problems than it solves—but the
purpose of a
definition is to limit or modify the ordinary meaning of a word
and
the Court is not entitled to do that.
So the question of law in this case must be whether it
was unreasonable to
hold that the Appellant's behaviour was not
insulting. To that question
there could in my view be only one
answer—No.
But as the Divisional Court have expressed their view as
to the meaning
of " insulting " I must, I think,
consider it. It was said: " The language of
" section 5,
omitting words which do not matter for our present purpose,
"
is this: 'Any person who in any public place . . . uses . . .
insult-
" ' ing .... behaviour with intent to provoke a
breach of the peace or
" 'whereby a breach of the peace is
likely to be occasioned, shall be guilty
" ' of an offence
'. It therefore becomes necessary to consider the meaning
"
of the word 'insulting' in its context in that section. In my view it
is not
" necessary, and is probably undesirable, to try to
frame an exhaustive
" definition which will cover every
possible set of facts that may arise for
" consideration
under this section. It is, as I think, quite sufficient for the
"
purpose of this case to say that behaviour which affronts other
people, and
" evidences a disrespect or contempt for their
rights, behaviour which reason-
" able persons would foresee
is likely to cause resentment or protest such as
" was
aroused in this case, and I rely particularly on the reaction of the
crowd
" as set out in the case, is insulting for the purpose
of this section."
I cannot agree with that. Parliament had to solve the
difficult question
how far freedom of speech or behaviour must be
limited in the general public
interest. It would have been going
much too far to prohibit all speech or
conduct likely to occasion
a breach of the peace because determined
opponents may not shrink
from organising or at least threatening a breach
of the peace in
order to silence a speaker whose views they detest. There-
fore
vigorous and it may be distasteful or unmannerly speech or
behaviour
is permitted so long as it does not go beyond any one of
three limits. It
must not be threatening. It must not be abusive.
It must not be insulting.
I see no reason why any of these should
be construed as having a specially
wide or a specially narrow
meaning. They are all limits easily recognisable
by the ordinary
man. Free speech is not impaired by ruling them out. But
before a
man can be convicted it must be clearly shown that one or more
of
them has been disregarded.
We were referred to a number of dictionary meanings of
"insult" such
as treating with insolence or contempt or
indignity or derision or dishonour
or offensive disrespect. Many
things otherwise unobjectionable may be said
or done in an
insulting way. There can be no definition. But an ordinary
sensible
man knows an insult when he sees or hears it.
Taking the passage which I have quoted, "affront"
is much too vague a
word to be helpful ; there can often be
disrespect without insult, and I do
3
not think that contempt for a person's rights as
distinct from contempt for
the person himself would generally be
held to be insulting. Moreover there
are many grounds other than
insult for feeling resentment or protesting. I
do not agree that
there can be conduct which is not insulting in the ordinary
sense
of the word but which is " insulting for the purpose of this
section ".
If the view of the Divisional Court was that in
this section the word
" insulting " has some special or
unusually wide meaning, then I do not
agree. Parliament has given
no indication that the word is to be given any
unusual meaning.
Insulting means insulting and nothing else.
If I had to decide, which I do not, whether the
Appellant's conduct insulted
the spectators in this case, I would
agree with the Magistrates. The spectators
may have been very
angry and justly so. The Appellant's conduct was
deplorable.
Probably it ought to be punishable. But I cannot see how it
insulted
the spectators.
I would allow the appeal with costs.
Lord Morris of Borth-y-Gest
MY LORDS,
The charge which was brought against the Appellant was
that he " Did
" use insulting behaviour whereby a breach
of the peace was likely to be
" occasioned at the All England
Lawn Tennis Club, Church Road, Wimble-
don, S.W.10 on 28th June,
1971 ". Having found the facts the Magistrates
came to the
conclusion that the Appellant's behaviour was not " insulting
"
behaviour " within the terms of the offence charged under
section 5 of
the Public Order Act, 1936, as amended: it was
therefore unnecessary for
them to consider any further matters.
Under that section, provided other
matters are proved, a person
will commit an offence if he uses threatening
behaviour or if he
uses abusive behaviour or if he uses insulting behaviour.
In the
present case the Magistrates had to consider whether the
Appellant
had used insulting behaviour. The words " insulting
behaviour " are words
that permit of ready comprehension.
Having found the facts it was for
the Magistrates applying
rational judgment and commonsense to reach
decision. Manifestly
they thought that however else the Appellant's
behaviour might be
characterised it was not to be described as insulting.
Having had
the case of Bryan v. Robinson [I960] 2 All.E.R. 173 cited
to
them, in which Lord Parker C.J. had pointed out that persons
may be
annoyed by behaviour which is not insulting behaviour, the
Magistrates may
have thought that the Appellant's behaviour was
annoying or very annoying
but yet was not on that account to be
held to have been insulting. The
Magistrates may have considered
that in most cases insulting behaviour is
behaviour which insults
some person or persons: they may have thought
that after the
incident neither a spectator nor a player, however displeased
or
annoyed he might have been, could sensibly have complained that he
had
been " insulted ".
In my view, the Magistrates' decision was really a
decision of fact just as
would be the decision of a jury if called
upon to decide whether someone
had used insulting behaviour. The
decision either of Magistrates or of a jury
could be attacked if
there had been misdirection. In the present case I can
see no
ground at all for suggesting that the Magistrates had
misdirected
themselves.
The decision of the Magistrates could, in my view, only
be reversed if it is
held that the facts as found show as a matter
of law that the Appellant's
behaviour was insulting. What the
Divisional Court have done is to lay
down a definition of the
words " insulting behaviour " and then to say that
the
Appellant's behaviour came within the definition. But the Act
contains
no such definition and indeed no words of definition are
needed. The words
of the section are clear and they convey of
themselves a meaning which the
ordinary citizen can well
understand. The suggested definition would enlarge
what Parliament
has enacted, and it would do this in relation to a criminal
offence.
It would lay down that behaviour which affronts other people and
4
evidences a disrespect or contempt for their rights and
which reasonable
people would foresee would be likely to cause
resentment or protest is
insulting behaviour for the purposes of
section 5. It may well be that
behaviour which is insulting will
often be behaviour which shows a disrespect
or contempt for
people's rights but it does not follow that whenever there
is
disrespect or contempt for people's rights there must always be
insulting
behaviour. Furthermore, there may be many manifestations
of behaviour
which will cause resentment or protest without being
insulting.
In the submissions made on behalf of the Respondent it
was acknowledged
that the definition laid down by the Divisional
Court was too wide and
that it would embrace conduct going beyond
what Parliament had intended.
It was not supported. An alternative
definition was propounded. It was
suggested that in the concept of
insulting behaviour there are the two
elements (a) that it
is deliberate behaviour which is intended or is likely to
give
offence and (b) that it is behaviour which is contemptuous of
or about
those who are to be offended. My Lords, I find it
unnecessary and indeed
undesirable to compose a definition of a
word which is in general use and
which presents no difficulty of
application or understanding. If the facts as
found by the
Magistrates (which I do not recount because they are recorded
in
the Case Stated) were put to a juryman who was asked to say
whether,
in his view, they constituted insulting behaviour I would
think it probable
that his answer would be the same as that given
by the Magistrates. But
whether this be so or not I find it
impossible to say that on the facts as they
found them the
Magistrates were obliged as a matter of law to find that
the
behaviour was insulting.
For the reasons which I have given I would allow the
appeal and set aside
the order made by the Divisional Court.
Viscount Dilhorne
MY LORDS,
After the magistrates at Wimbledon had dismissed the
information laid
against the Appellant without calling on him to
answer the prosecution's
case, they were asked to state a case.
They did so and in paragraph 7
thereof said:
" Having considered the evidence and the
authorities cited to us, we
" came to the conclusion that the
Respondent's " (the present Appellant)
" behaviour was
not insulting within the terms of the offence alleged
"
against him ".
and in paragraph 8 that
" The question for the opinion of the High Court is
whether, on the
" above statement of facts, we came to a
correct determination and
" decision in point of law."
The case stated did not state precisely what was the
question of law on
which the opinion of the High Court was sought.
It may be because the
Magistrates found some difficulty in
formulating it. The Divisional Court,
however, treated the case as
raising the question of the meaning to be given
to the word "
insulting " in the expression " insulting behaviour "
in section 5
of the Public Order Act, 1936.
The Divisional Court allowed the appeal but, while
refusing leave to appeal
to this House, certified that a point of
law of general public importance was
involved, namely:
" Whether conduct which evidences a disrespect for
the rights of
"others so that it is likely to cause their
resentment or give rise to
" protests from them is insulting
behaviour within the meaning of
" section 5 of the Public
Order Act 1936 ".
The Appellant now appeals with the leave of this House.
In the Divisional Court in the course of his judgment,
with which the other
members of the Court agreed, Melford
Stevenson J. said : —
" behaviour which affronts other people, and
evidences a disrespect
" or contempt for their rights,
behaviour which reasonable persons would
5
" foresee is likely to
cause resentment or protest such as was aroused
" in this
case, and I rely particularly on the reaction of the crowd as set
"
out in the case, is insulting for the purpose of this section."
I would therefore allow the appeal with costs.
Lord Diplock
MY LORDS,
I agree with your Lordships that this appeal should be allowed.
Lord Kilbrandon
MY LORDS,
6
" annoyed by behaviour which is not insulting
behaviour." We must assume
that the Magistrates weighed the
evidence against this ruling, and appreciated
accordingly that,
while the spectators may have been annoyed, that did not
necessarily
mean that they had been insulted. The second relates to
insulting
words which might have been expected to, and did, cause
a riot to break
out at a public meeting; this could not have
assisted the Magistrates or
affected their decision. The third is
concerned with whether the locus of
the incident was a public
place, and the present point did not arise. No
authority was cited
to the Magistrates, or indeed before this House, which
declares
that any positive test is available by which insulting behaviour
can
be recognised as such ; nevertheless, we were in effect
invited to apply some
such test. We were asked to hold that,
accepting as facts the incidents
described in the stated case, it
followed as matter of law that the conduct
of the accused was
insulting and therefore, in the circumstances, criminal.
This
seems to me to be impossible. It may well be that if the
Magistrates
had found the Appellant's behaviour to have been
insulting, their decision
would not have been challengeable, but
that only means that their decision,
whichever way it went, must
have been a decision on a question of fact; no
question of law can
be spelled out of their evaluation of behaviour which,
in the
absence of a specific finding that it was of an insulting character,
is
capable of more than one interpretation. The drawing of
inferences from
behaviour is a fact-finding process. It would be
unwise, in my opinion, to
attempt to lay down any positive rules
for the recognition of insulting
behaviour as such, since the
circumstances in which the application of the
rules would be
called for are almost infinitely variable ; the most that can
be
done is to lay down limits, as was done in Bryan v. Robinson
(supra), in
order to ensure that the statute is not
interpreted more widely than its terms
will bear.
I did not myself find the quotation of dictionary
definitions helpful, as it
might perhaps have been had the
question been whether, the Magistrates
having convicted, there is
any accepted meaning of the word " insulting "
which
they might be said legitimately to have adopted in coming to
their
conclusion. But " insulting " is an ordinary
uncomplicated English word.
Boswell defends Dr. Johnson, to whose
work we were referred, against a
charge of obscurity in his
definitions, by quoting from the preface to the
dictionary: "To
explain, requires the use of terms less abstruse than that
"
which is to be explained, and such terms cannot always be found. . .
. The
" easiest word, whatever it may be, can never be
translated into one more
" easy." One felt the force of
this upon being offered as exegetical sub-
stitutions for the word
" insult" such words as " insolence " or "
affront".
All three words are as much, or as little, in need
of interpretation.
It was conceded before us that the question which has
been submitted to
us as involving a point of law of public
importance could not be answered
in the affirmative. To do so
would be to declare that, among other mani-
festations, "
conduct which evidences a disrespect for the rights of others
"
which is likely to cause their resentment " must as matter of
law be held
to be insulting, and punishable under the Public Order
Act, 1936. A
common example might be, an assertion, by throwing
down a gate, of a
public right of way. This would be showing
disrespect of a right of property,
and would certainly be
resented, but the behaviour might in certain circum-
stances be in
fact lawful. I would accordingly allow this appeal.
327123 Dd 197094 100 7/72 St.S.